Britain does a bad job at keeping globally relevant tech firms, former Arm CEO says

Britain does a bad job at keeping globally relevant tech firms, former Arm CEO says


Warren East, former CEO of Rolls Royce and Arm, speaking at a tech event in London on June 13, 2022.

Luke MacGregor | Bloomberg via Getty Images

CAMBRIDGE, England — The U.K. is doing a bad job of commercializing technology businesses globally and needs a mindset shift from the investor community to win on the world stage, a former CEO of British chip design firm Arm said Tuesday.

In a keynote speech at Cambridge Tech Week, Warren East, who led Arm between 1994 and 2013, said that there have been criticisms that lackluster growth and poor rates of GDP per head in the U.K. are a source of national “embarrassment.”

He added that too often firms that achieve scale in Britain have a tendency to change locations from the U.K. or list abroad in countries such as the U.S., due to difficulties with achieving global relevance from the country.

“I think we have a lot to offer in terms of U.K.-based innovative technology,” East told the audience at Cambridge Tech Week. However, he added: “We tend not to be able to realise as many global businesses as that promise would suggest.”

East was also previously the CEO of U.K. aviation engineering giant Rolls-Royce. He is currently a non-executive director on the board of Tokamak Energy.

East said that Britain “needs to get commercialization right,” adding that too much innovation gets created in the U.K. but is then exported elsewhere around the world.

There is “sadly a common story of all the wonderful stuff that gets made in Britain and then gets commercialized and exploited elsewhere,” East said. He added that he doesn’t have a “silver bullet” solution on how to fix the issue, but suggested that the U.K. needs to encourage more “risk appetite” to support high-growth tech firms.

“We’re often told that the problem isn’t the startup bit, it’s the scale up bit,” East said, explaining that there are far deeper pools of capital presence in the U.S. “Investor risk appetite in the U.S. is higher than it is in the U.K.,” he said

East noted that there have been pushes among the British entrepreneurial community and VCs for a change to capital market rules that will allow more investments from pension funds into startups and “stimulate risk appetite” in the U.K.

“Fortunately I think we can expect more of that over the coming years,” East told attendees of the Cambridge event. However, he added: “Businesses can’t guarantee that’s going to happen, and can’t wait for the rules to change.”

Last year, Arm, whose chip architectures can be found in most of the world’s smartphone processors, listed on the Nasdaq in the U.S. in a major blow to U.K. officials and the London Stock Exchange’s ambitions to hold more tech debuts in Britain.

The company remains majority-owned by Japanese tech giant SoftBank.



Source

Nvidia’s Huang to visit China as AI chip sales stall
World

Nvidia’s Huang to visit China as AI chip sales stall

Nvidia founder and CEO Jensen Huang (R) speaks next to BlackRock chairman and WEF co-chairman Larry Fink during the World Economic Forum (WEF) annual meeting in Davos on January 21, 2026. Fabrice Coffrini | Afp | Getty Images BEIJING — Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang plans to visit China in the coming days ahead of the […]

Read More
Trump withdraws ‘Board of Peace’ invitation to Carney in widening rift with Canada
World

Trump withdraws ‘Board of Peace’ invitation to Carney in widening rift with Canada

DAVOS, SWITZERLAND – JANUARY 20: Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney delivers a speech at the World Economic Forum Annual Meeting held in Davos, Switzerland on January 20, 2026. Anadolu | Getty Images U.S. President Donald Trump withdrew the invitation to Canada to join his “Board of Peace,” days after Prime Minister Mark Carney’s address in […]

Read More
Bank of Japan raises economic growth forecasts ahead of snap election, holds rates at 0.75%
World

Bank of Japan raises economic growth forecasts ahead of snap election, holds rates at 0.75%

A guide sign reading “Bank of Japan” is seen in Tokyo on July 31, 2024. Kazuhiro Nogi | Afp | Getty Images Japan’s central bank on Friday raised economic growth forecasts while holding its key policy rate at 0.75% as the country prepares to go into an election. The Bank of Japan upgraded its economic […]

Read More